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OMG Mama that looks so delicious, I am making it for sure!
Thank you and thanks to Brook for helping me out here!
When my son came to visit not too awful long ago he was telling me about some splendid bread pudding he'd had, I felt like I had deprived the poor kid of something his whole life as I heard him talking. That made me more determined than ever to learn how to make it and make it right! I may one day actually love me some bread pudding!
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I think part of the secret, Cathy, is to avoid commercial white bread, like Wonder. That's probably why you remember it as soggy and undercooked.
Note that Mama's Danish Crumb Pudding recipe actually specifies homemade bread.
While I can't prove this, I really believe that bread made with leavening, when recycled, maintains it's integrity, whereas air-puffed bread doesn't.
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Thanks I will use homemade!
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And stale, Cathy. Fresh bread just doesn't work as well, partly because it doesn't absorb the custard mix as readily.
If your bread is fresh, let it stand out at least most of a day. That should help your pudding.
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Cathy - we always have homemade bread in our house - maybe that is why our bread puddings always are so good and never soggy. You can even try your old recipe using homemade bread - that could be the problem.
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Ok brave souls - this one is still different -
Chile Cheese Bread Pudding
5 large eggs
1 cup whole milk
2/3 cup heavy cream
1 teaspoon chili powder
1/4 teaspoon salt
1/4 teaspoon ground cumin
1/4 teaspoon dried oregano
3/4 cup (2 1/2 ounces) loosely packed coarsely shredded sharp Cheddar cheese
1/2 cup (1 1/2 ounces) loosely packed coarsely shredded Monterey jack cheese
2 tablespoons canned diced green chiles
6 1/2 cups trimmed and cubed (1-inch) day-old French or Italian bread
Adjust rack to lower third of oven. Preheat oven to 350 degrees F.
Generously butter a 12-cup (2 1/4-inch, scant 1/2 cup capacity) muffin tin.
In a large bowl, whisk the eggs, milk and cream to blend thoroughly. Mix in the chili powder, salt, cumin and oregano, then mix in the cheeses and chiles. Add the bread; mix thoroughly. Divide the mixture evenly among the muffin tin cups.
Bake 25 to 30 minutes, or until a knife blade inserted into the centers comes out clean. Cool 5 to 10 minutes. Slide a knife blade around puddings to loosen them; lift out of molds with a small spatula. Serve warm or at room temperature.
Makes 12 servings.
You also may make the bread puddings in ramekins, individual custard cups, or mini-muffin pans. Adjust baking times as follows: Place filled ramekins or custard cups on a baking sheet and bake for about 20 minutes; or bake pudding in mini-muffin pans for about 15 minutes.
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Can I use dry bread cubes I made from some of my old homemade bread? I dried them in the oven to use at a later time for dressing, crutons, and such? Or should the bread still be moist?
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Bread Pudding is my ALL-TIME FAV DESSERT! Don't believe that- I say that about everything from pecan pie to banana cake! BUT, I do LOVE me some good bread pudding. The only thing better than still-warm bread pudding with a silky whiskey sauce, rum sauce or vanilla sauce, is COLD bread pudding right out of the fridge. LOVE IT! I remember in grade schhol our hair-netted lunch ladies made big pans of bread pudding with apples baked into it- and they smeared vanilla pudding on top and cut into squares. This too was incredible!
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Cathy, those bread cubes should work just fine. Just make sure you let them sit in the pudding mix long enough to absorb it.
I gurantee you will change your mind about bread pudding, no matter which of the recipes you use.
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I've made fantastic Bread Puddings using super-stale (we're talking HARD!) French Bread and to my taste it provided consistently the best taste and texture.
But, once you become pretty well-versed in getting your custard/bread ratio and baking time/method just right, don't stop there... at remote-site work-camps (where, as discussed before nothing is wasted!) everything went into our Bread Puddings from aged hotdog/burger buns and dinner rolls, to stale muffins, donuts, bagels, cinnamon rolls, kringle, danish, tea-rings, etc.
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